Temperature-compensated micro-electromechanical device, and method of temperature compensation in a micro-electromechanical device

ABSTRACT

A micro-electromechanical device includes a semiconductor substrate, in which a first microstructure and a second microstructure of reference are integrated. The first microstructure and the second microstructure are arranged in the substrate so as to undergo equal strains as a result of thermal expansions of the substrate. Furthermore, the first microstructure is provided with movable parts and fixed parts with respect to the substrate, while the second microstructure has a shape that is substantially symmetrical to the first microstructure but is fixed with respect to the substrate. By subtracting the changes in electrical characteristics of the second microstructure from those of the first, variations in electrical characteristics of the first microstructure caused by changes in thermal expansion or contraction can be compensated for.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION

This application is a divisional of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/244,439, filed Oct. 5, 2005, now pending, which application is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

1. Field of the Invention

The present invention relates to a temperature-compensated micro-electromechanical device and to a method of temperature compensation in a micro-electromechanical device.

2. Description of the Related Art

As is known, the use of micro-electromechanical systems (MEMS) is increasingly widespread in several sectors of technology and has yielded encouraging results especially in the construction of inertial sensors, micro-integrated gyroscopes, and electromechanical oscillators for a wide range of applications.

MEMS systems of this type usually comprise at least one mass, which is connected to a fixed body (stator) by means of springs and is movable with respect to the stator according to pre-determined degrees of freedom. The movable mass and the stator are capacitively coupled by a plurality of respective comb-fingered electrodes facing one another so as to form capacitors. The movement of the movable mass with respect to the stator, for example on account of an external stress, modifies the capacitance of the capacitors; from which it is possible to deduce the relative displacement of the movable mass with respect to the fixed body, and hence the degree of force applied to cause the movement. On the other hand, it is also possible to apply an electrostatic force to the movable mass to set it in motion, by supplying appropriate biasing voltages.

In optimal working conditions, MEMS systems present excellent performance; in particular, MEMS inertial sensors are extremely sensitive and precise. However, a limit of currently available MEMS systems lies in the strong dependence of their response upon the temperature. In fact, also on account of their extremely small dimensions, very modest variations in temperature can produce significant strains in micro-electromechanical structures. Such strains are equivalent to relative displacements of the electrodes of the movable mass with respect to those of the stator and cause a detectable variation of the capacitive coupling between stator and movable mass. In practice, then, an offset, due to the variations in temperature, is added to the output signal of the MEMS system.

To overcome this drawback, MEMS systems are frequently incorporated in special packages, made so as to reduce the effects of thermal expansion. Alternatively, it has been proposed to use compensation circuits that electrically erase the effects of possible thermal drifts. According to one solution, for example, a nonlinear element with a temperature dependent electrical characteristic is integrated in the reading interface of the MEMS system (a diode, for example). Another technique envisages, instead, the use of a temperature sensor.

The solutions illustrated above are, however, not really satisfactory both because in any case the achievable precision is not optimal and because high costs are involved. The special packages, in fact, cannot be of a standard type and hence have very high design and fabrication costs. The compensation circuits require burdensome procedures for measuring the thermal drifts and calibrating the compensation curves and, moreover, a sufficient stability over time cannot be guaranteed.

BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

Embodiments of the present invention provide a temperature-compensated micro-electromechanical device and a method of temperature compensation in a micro-electromechanical device.

According to one embodiment of the invention, a micro-electromechanical device is provided, comprising a semiconductor substrate, a first microstructure integrated in the substrate, and a second microstructure integrated in the substrate as a reference, and arranged so that the first microstructure and the second microstructure undergo equal strains as a result of thermal expansions of the substrate. The first microstructure comprises movable parts and fixed parts with respect to the substrate, while the second microstructure has a shape substantially symmetrical to the first microstructure, but is fixed in position with respect to the substrate.

The first and second microstructures are specularly symmetrical with respect to a symmetry axis of the substrate. That is to say that the second microstructure is a mirror image of the first microstructure, and they are symmetrically positioned with respect to a center of mass of the semiconductor substrate. According to an embodiment of the invention, the first microstructure includes a capacitive coupling between movable electrodes and fixed electrodes, while the second microstructure includes a capacitive coupling between electrodes in positions corresponding to the movable and fixed electrodes of the first microstructure. Because of their substantially identical configuration, the capacitive couplings of the first and second microstructures are substantially identical in their response to changes in temperature, though only the first microstructure is movable with respect to the substrate.

According to an embodiment of the invention, a method is provided in which changes in the capacitive coupling of the first microstructure are employed to detect acceleration of the semiconductor substrate, while changes in the capacitive coupling of the second microstructure are employed to compensate for changes in the capacitive coupling of the first microstructure caused by thermal effects.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE DRAWING(S)

For a better understanding of the invention, some embodiments thereof are now described, purely by way of non-limiting example and with reference to the attached drawings.

FIG. 1 is a simplified block diagram of a micro-electromechanical device according to a first embodiment of the present invention.

FIG. 2 is a schematic top plan view of a part of a semiconductor chip included in the device of FIG. 1.

FIGS. 3-5 are cross sections through the chip of FIG. 2, taken, respectively, along the lines III-Ill, IV-IV and V-V of FIG. 2.

FIG. 6 is a simplified block diagram of a micro-electromechanical device according to a second embodiment of the present invention.

FIG. 7 is a simplified block diagram of a micro-electromechanical device according to a third embodiment of the present invention.

FIG. 8 is a schematic top plan view of a part of a semiconductor chip included in the device of FIG. 7.

FIG. 9 is a simplified block diagram of a micro-electromechanical device according to a fourth embodiment of the present invention.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

FIG. 1 illustrates a linear MEMS accelerometer 1 having a detection axis X1. The MEMS accelerometer 1 comprises a detection microstructure 2 and a reference microstructure 3 that are substantially identical to one another and are both integrated in a same chip 5 of semiconductor material, together with a control unit 4. More precisely, the chip 5 has a rectangular or square shape and has a geometrical center 5 a, which is also a center of symmetry. The detection microstructure 2 and the reference microstructure 3 are specular with respect to a symmetry axis S1 which is perpendicular to the detection axis X1 and passes through the center 5 a of the chip 5. The detection microstructure 2 and the reference microstructure 3 are moreover connected to the control unit 5 for supplying a measurement signal S_(X), correlated to the accelerations imparted to the chip 5 according to the detection axis X1, and, respectively, a compensation signal S_(COMP) indicating the expansion to which the chip 5 is subjected as a result of the temperature.

With reference to FIGS. 2-5, the detection microstructure 2 comprises a suspended mass 6 and a stator structure 7, which is fixed to a substrate 8 of the chip 5 and separated from the suspended mass 6 in a conventional way by means of insulating regions (not illustrated). A trench 9, in this case filled with dielectric material, separates the stator structure 7 laterally from the substrate 8. The suspended mass 6 is mechanically connected to the stator structure 7 by a plurality of elastic connection elements 10 (four, in the example described), so shaped as to enable the suspended mass 6 to oscillate with respect to the stator structure 7 in the direction of the detection axis X1. The elastic connection elements 10 (FIG. 3) extend from the suspended mass 6 and are fixed to respective suspension anchorages 11 of the stator structure 7.

The suspended mass 6 and the stator structure 7 are provided with respective plane detection electrodes 12, arranged perpendicular to the detection axis X1 and comb-fingered (see also FIG. 4). In greater detail, the detection electrodes 12 of the suspended mass 6 project from the suspended mass 6 itself towards the stator structure 7; instead, the detection electrodes 12 of the stator structure 7 are fixed to respective stator anchorages 14 and project towards the suspended mass 6, at a distance from the substrate 8 of the chip 5. Furthermore, each detection electrode 12 of the suspended mass 6 faces and is capacitively coupled to a respective pair of detection electrodes 12 of the stator structure 7. In turn, the detection electrodes 12 of the stator structure 7 are electrically connected to one another in sets, according to conventional schemes of MEMS accelerometers (not illustrated in detail herein). The detection microstructure 2 is also equipped with the normal electrical connections of one-axis linear accelerometers (not illustrated herein) for connection of the detection electrodes 12 to the control unit 4.

The reference microstructure 3 is substantially identical and is arranged symmetrically to the detection microstructure 2 with respect to the symmetry axis S1, which is perpendicular to the detection axis X1 and passes through the center 5 a of the chip 5. In particular, the reference microstructure 3 comprises a suspended mass 6′ and a stator structure 7′, which have the same shapes and dimensions as the suspended mass 6 and, respectively, the stator structure 7 of the detection microstructure 2 and are separated from one another in a conventional way by means of insulating regions (not illustrated). The stator structure 7′ is delimited laterally by the substrate 8 of the chip 5 by means of a trench 9′ filled with dielectric material. In the case of the reference microstructure 3, however, the suspended mass 6′ is rigidly connected to the stator structure 7′ by means of rigid connection elements 10′, which are substantially non-deformable. The suspended mass 6′ is hence fixed with respect to the stator structure 7′. The rigid connection elements 10′ project from the suspended mass 6′, at a distance from the substrate 8 of the chip 5, and are fixed to respective suspension anchorages 11′, which have the same shape and the same relative distances as the first suspension anchorages 11 of the detection microstructure 2 (see also FIG. 5). The suspended mass 6′ and the stator structure 7′ are provided with respective plane detection electrodes 12′, arranged perpendicular to the detection axis X1 and comb-fingered. The detection electrodes 12′ of the reference microstructure 3 have the same shape and the same relative positions as the detection electrodes 12 of the detection microstructure 2. In particular, the detection electrodes 12′ of the suspended mass 6′ project therefrom towards the stator structure 7′; the detection electrodes 12′ of the stator structure 7′ are instead fixed to respective stator anchorages 14′ and project towards the suspended mass 6′. Furthermore, each detection electrode 12′ of the suspended mass 6′ faces and is capacitively coupled to a respective pair of detection electrodes 12′ of the stator structure 7′. The detection electrodes 12′ of the stator structure 7′ are connected to one another in sets according to conventional schemes of MEMS accelerometers and are not illustrated herein in detail. The stator anchorages 14′ of the reference microstructure 3 have the same shape and the same relative distances as the stator anchorages 14 of the detection microstructure 2. Also the reference microstructure 3 is provided with the normal electrical connections (not illustrated) of the one-axis linear MEMS accelerometers for connection of the detection electrodes 12′ with the control unit 4.

In use, the detection microstructure 2 and the reference microstructure 3 are read by the control unit 4 using conventional reading modalities of linear MEMS accelerometers. As described above, moreover, the detection microstructure 2 and the reference microstructure 3 are substantially identical and, since they are also integrated in the same chip 5, they are deformed exactly in the same way as a result of thermal expansion. In particular, the relative distances of the suspension anchorages 11′ and of the stator anchorages 14′ of the reference microstructure 3, even though they are not fixed, remain in any case equal to the relative distances of the corresponding suspension anchorages 11 and stator anchorages 14 of the detection microstructure 2. For this reason, the configuration of the detection electrodes 12′ of the suspended mass 6′ and of the stator structure 7′ of the reference microstructure 3 is always equal to the rest configuration (i.e., in the absence of accelerations along the detection axis X1) of the detection electrodes 12 of the suspended mass 6 and of the stator structure 7 of the detection microstructure 2. Consequently, temperature variations of the chip 5 cause identical variations in the measurement signal S_(X) and in the compensation signal S_(COMP). However, in the measurement signal S_(X) the effect of temperature variations is superimposed on the effect of the accelerations according to the detection axis X1, whereas the variations of the compensation signal S_(COMP) depend exclusively upon thermal expansion, because the suspended mass 6′ of the reference microstructure 3 is fixed. The compensation signal S_(COMP) can thus be used for effective compensation of the effects of thermal expansion on the measurement signal S_(X).

For this purpose, the control unit 4 subtracts the compensation signal S_(COMP) from the measurement signal S_(X) for generating the output acceleration signal S_(XO).

The location of the detection microstructure 2 and of the reference microstructure 3 in specularly symmetrical positions with respect to the symmetry axis S1 of the chip 5 enables maximum precision of compensation to be achieved, also considering that, on account of the thermal expansion, the chips tend to undergo deformation and to assume a cup-like shape. Owing to the described arrangement, the compensation is extremely precise because, practically in any operating condition, the thermal expansion acts homogeneously on the detection microstructure 2 and on the reference microstructure 3.

According to an alternative embodiment of the invention, illustrated in FIG. 6, a linear MEMS accelerometer 100 having a detection axis X2 comprises a detection microstructure 102, a reference microstructure 103, and a control unit 104, integrated in a semiconductor chip 105 of a square or rectangular shape and having a center 105 a of symmetry. The detection microstructure 102 and the reference microstructure 103 are of the type illustrated in FIG. 2. In particular, the detection microstructure 102 comprises a suspended mass 106, movable along the detection axis X2 with respect to a fixed stator structure 107; and the detection microstructure 103 comprises a suspended mass 106′ and a stator structure 107′, both fixed and having the same shape and the same dimensions as the suspended mass 106 and, respectively, as the stator structure 107 of the detection microstructure 102. Furthermore, the detection microstructure 102 and the reference microstructure 103 are specularly symmetrical with respect to a symmetry axis S2, parallel to the detection axis X2 and passing through the center 105 a of the chip 105, and are aligned in a direction perpendicular to the detection axis X2 itself.

A third embodiment of the invention is illustrated in FIGS. 7 and 8. In this case, a linear MEMS accelerometer 200 having a detection axis X3 comprises a detection microstructure 202, a reference microstructure 203 and a control unit 204, which are integrated in a semiconductor chip 205 of a square or rectangular shape and having a center 205 a of symmetry. The detection microstructure 202 and the reference microstructure 203 are identical to one another and are symmetrical with respect to a symmetry axis S3 perpendicular to the detection axis X3 and passing through the center 205 a of the chip 205. In greater detail, the detection microstructure 202 comprises a suspended mass 206, a stator structure 207, and elastic connection elements 210, which connect the suspended mass 206 to respective suspension anchorages 211 of the stator structure 207 in a way similar to what is described in relation to the detection microstructure 2 of FIG. 2. In particular, the suspended mass 206 of the detection microstructure 202 is constrained to the stator structure 207 so as to be oscillatable according to the detection axis X3. The suspended mass 206 and the stator structure 207 of the detection microstructure 202 are separated from one another in a conventional way by insulating regions (not illustrated) and are provided with respective comb-fingered detection electrodes 212, facing one another in pairs to establish a capacitive coupling. More precisely, each electrode 212 of the stator structure 207 is fixed to a respective anchoring stator 214 and is coupled to a respective detection electrode 212 of the suspended mass 206. Furthermore, with reference to the arrangement of FIG. 6, the detection electrodes 212 arranged on the top side of the suspended mass 206 have their right-hand face coupled to the left-hand face of the respective detection electrode 212 of the stator structure 207; instead, the detection electrodes 212 set on the bottom side of the suspended mass 206 have their left-hand face coupled to the right-hand face of the respective detection electrode 212 of the stator structure 207. The detection electrodes 212 of the stator microstructures 207 are connected to one another in sets in a conventional way and not illustrated in detail.

The reference microstructure 203 comprises a suspended mass 206′ and a stator structure 207′, having the same shape and the same dimensions as the suspended mass 206 and as the stator structure 207 of the detection microstructure 202 and separated from one another in a conventional way by insulating regions (not illustrated). The suspended mass 206′ is rigidly connected to the stator structure 207′ by means of rigid connection elements 210′, which are substantially non-deformable. In particular, the rigid connection elements 210′ are fixed to respective suspension anchorages 211′ of the stator structure 207′. The suspended mass 206′ and the stator structure 207′ of the reference microstructure 203 are capacitively coupled by a plurality of respective comb-fingered detection electrodes 212′, which are arranged symmetrically to the detection electrodes 212 of the detection microstructure 202 with respect to the symmetry axis S3. More precisely, each detection electrode 212′ of the stator structure 107′ is fixed to a respective anchoring stator 214 and is coupled to a respective detection electrode 212′ of the suspended mass 206′. With reference to the arrangement of FIG. 6, the detection electrodes 212′ arranged on the top side of the suspended mass 206′ have their left-hand face coupled to the right-hand face of the respective detection electrode 212′ of the stator structure 207′; instead, the detection electrodes 212′ set on the bottom side of the suspended mass 206′ have their right-hand face coupled to the left-hand face of the respective detection electrode 212′ of the stator structure 207′. Furthermore, the relative distances of the suspension anchorages 211′ and of the stator anchorages 214′ of the reference microstructure 203 are equal to the relative distances of the corresponding suspension anchorages 211 and stator anchorages 214 of the detection microstructure 202. The detection electrodes 212′ of the stator microstructures 207′ are connected to one another in sets in a conventional way and not illustrated in detail.

According to a fourth embodiment of the invention, illustrated schematically in FIG. 9, a MEMS accelerometer 300 has a first detection axis X4 and a second detection axis Y4 perpendicular to one another. The MEMS accelerometer 300 comprises a first detection microstructure 302 and a second detection microstructure 322, a first reference microstructure 303 and a second reference microstructure 323, and a control unit 304 integrated in a same semiconductor chip 305, of square or rectangular shape and having a center 305 a of symmetry. The microstructures 302, 322, 303, 323 are all of the type described above with reference to FIGS. 7 and 8. In detail, the first detection microstructure 302 and the first reference microstructure 303 comprise respective suspended masses, designated by 306 and 306′, having the same shape and dimensions; and respective stator structures, designated by 307 and 307′, which also have the same shapes and dimensions. Furthermore, in the first detection microstructure 302, the suspended mass 306 is movable according to the first detection axis X4 with respect to the stator structure 307, whereas in the first reference microstructure 303 the suspended mass 306′ is fixed. The second detection microstructure 322 and the second reference microstructure 323 comprise: respective suspended masses, designated by 326 and 326′, having the same shape and dimensions; and respective stator structures, designated by 327 and 327′, which also have the same shapes and dimensions. Furthermore, in the first detection microstructure 322, the suspended mass 326 is movable according to the second detection axis Y4 with respect to the stator structure 327, whereas in the second reference microstructure 323 the suspended mass 326′ is fixed.

The first detection microstructure 302 detects the accelerations which act according to the first detection axis X4. The second detection microstructure 322 is rotated by 90° in the plane of FIG. 8 to detect the accelerations which act according to the second detection axis Y4. The first reference microstructure 303 is arranged symmetrically to the first detection microstructure 302 with respect to the center 305 a of the chip 305. In practice, the configuration of the first reference microstructure 303 is obtained by overturning through 180° the first detection microstructure 302 (in the rest position) once about a first overturning axis S4 and once about a second overturning axis S5, which are parallel to the first detection axis X4 and to the second detection axis Y4, respectively, and pass through the center 305 a of the chip 305. Similarly, the second reference microstructure 323 is arranged symmetrical to the second detection microstructure 322 with respect to the center 305 a of the chip 305. The configuration of the second reference microstructure 323 is obtained by overturning through 180° the second detection microstructure 322 (in the resting position) once about the first axis S4 and once about the second overturning axis S5.

The first and second detection microstructures 302, 322 provide the control unit 304 with a first measurement signal S_(X) and with a second measurement signal S_(Y), which are correlated to the accelerations acting on the chip 305 according to the first detection axis X4 and to the second detection axis Y4, respectively. The first and the second reference microstructures 303, 323 provide the control unit 304 with a first compensation signal S_(COMPX) and with a second compensation signal S_(COMPY), which indicate the amount of the thermal expansion of the chip 305 in the direction of the first detection axis X4 and of the second detection axis Y4, respectively. Finally, the control unit 304 generates a first output acceleration signal S_(XO), by subtracting the first compensation signal S_(COMPX) from the first measurement signal S_(X); and a second output acceleration signal S_(YO), by subtracting the second compensation signal S_(COMPY) from the second measurement signal S_(Y).

In the fourth embodiment, in practice, the precision of the compensation is maximized, by arranging the detection microstructure and the compensation microstructure symmetrically with respect to the center of the chip.

Finally, it is clear that modifications and variations can be made to the device and to the method described herein, without thereby departing from the scope of the present invention, as defined in the annexed claims.

In particular, the invention can be exploited for compensating the effects of thermal expansion in various types of MEMS devices that use a mass that oscillates with respect to a fixed body, such as, for example, two-axes or three-axes linear accelerometers, rotational accelerometers, inclinometers, gyroscopes, pressure sensors, and electromechanical oscillators.

The control unit can be made separately, on a chip different from the one containing the microstructures.

All of the above U.S. patents, U.S. patent application publications, U.S. patent applications, foreign patents, foreign patent applications and non-patent publications referred to in this specification and/or listed in the Application Data Sheet, are incorporated herein by reference, in their entirety. 

The invention claimed is:
 1. A method, comprising: subjecting a sensor to an acceleration, the sensor having a first microstructure and a second microstructure on a semiconductor substrate, the first microstructure having a first electrode that is moveable relative to the substrate, and the second microstructure having a second electrode that is rigidly fixed to the substrate, the first and second electrodes being substantially symmetrical to each other; detecting, from the first microstructure, a first signal that includes an acceleration component and a temperature variation component; detecting, from the second microstructure, a second signal that includes a temperature variation component; and using the first and second signals to determine a temperature-corrected acceleration signal that corresponds to the acceleration of the sensor.
 2. The method of claim 1 wherein determining the temperature-corrected acceleration signal comprises using the second signal to cancel the temperature variation component of the first signal.
 3. The method of claim 1 wherein: detecting the first signal comprises detecting a first change in value of a capacitive coupling between the first electrode and the semiconductor substrate; and detecting the second signal comprises detecting a second change in value of a capacitive coupling between the second electrode and the semiconductor substrate.
 4. The method of claim 3, wherein using the first and second signals to determine a temperature-corrected acceleration signal comprises obtaining a difference between the first and second changes in value.
 5. A method, comprising: detecting a change in value of a first capacitive coupling between a first body and a substrate, the change in value of the first capacitive coupling correlating at least in part to a movement of the first body relative to the substrate in response to an acceleration; detecting a change in value of a second capacitive coupling between a second body and the substrate, the change in value of the second capacitive coupling correlating at least in part to a degree of influence of temperature on the first and second capacitive couplings; and deriving, from the changes in value of the first and second capacitive couplings, a temperature-corrected change in value of the first capacitive coupling, substantially correlating to the movement of the first body relative to the substrate.
 6. The method of claim 5 wherein deriving the temperature-corrected change in value comprises obtaining a difference in value between the first and second capacitive couplings.
 7. The method of claim 5, comprising deriving, from the temperature-corrected change in value of the first capacitive coupling, a temperature-corrected value corresponding to the acceleration of the substrate.
 8. A method comprising: accelerating an assembly that includes a first body, a second body, and a substrate, the acceleration causing the first body to move relative to the substrate, the second body being rigidly coupled to the substrate and resisting movement with respect to the substrate, the first body having first dimensions and the second body having second dimensions that are substantially equal to the first dimensions of the first body; detecting a first signal between the first body and the substrate, the first signal including an acceleration component and a temperature variation component; detecting a second signal between the second body and the substrate; and determining a temperature-corrected acceleration signal using the first and second signals.
 9. The method of claim 8 wherein detecting the first signal comprises detecting a change in capacitance between the first body and the substrate, and wherein detecting the second signal comprises detecting a change in capacitance between the second body and the substrate.
 10. The method of claim 8 wherein determining a temperature-corrected acceleration signal comprises obtaining a difference between the first signal and the second signal.
 11. The method of claim 8 wherein the acceleration causes a moveable electrode of the first body to move relative to the substrate.
 12. The method of claim 8 wherein the assembly is a sensor.
 13. The method of claim 8 wherein the first body has a first mass and the second body has a second mass that is substantially equal to the first mass of the first body.
 14. A method comprising: accelerating an assembly that includes a first body, a second body, and a substrate, the acceleration causing the first body to move relative to the substrate, the second body being rigidly coupled to the substrate and resisting movement with respect to the substrate, the first body having a first mass and the second body having a second mass, the second mass being substantially equal to the first mass; detecting a first signal between the first body and the substrate, the first signal including an acceleration component and a temperature variation component; detecting a second signal between the second body and the substrate; and determining a temperature-corrected acceleration signal using the first and second signals.
 15. The method of claim 14 wherein the assembly is a mass.
 16. The method of claim 14 wherein the first body has first dimensions and the second body has second dimensions, the second dimensions being substantially equal to the first dimensions.
 17. The method of claim 14 wherein detecting the first signal comprises detecting a change in capacitance between the first body and the substrate, and wherein detecting the second signal comprises detecting a change in capacitance between the second body and the substrate. 